The Medieval World and Courtly Love


Courtly Love


Medieval marriage

a contract for economic & political purposes
love developed after marriage, if at all
woman entirely subordinate to husband
compatible with one medieval attitude towards women:
an inferior temptress:
Eve
a creature of unbridled appetite
must be restrained by husband's authority

The ideal of the Lady on a pedestal

1) Church:
Blessed Virgin Mary w/ Christ child in arms
11th c Queen of Heaven
Bernard de Clairvaux (12th c):
Mary as the aqueduct that leads the waters of divine grace down to earth
God wills us to have 'everything through Mary'
2) Courtly love (19th c term)
fin' amors 'refined love'
woman freq. of higher rank or older (Lancelot & Guinevere)
possibly reflecting feudal hierarchy
dedication of lover
love at a distance
'love-talking'; courteous behavior
euphemisms
genteel; civilizing
may be adulterous
but frequently not consummated
rejected marriage based on property & pedigree
substituted a relationship based on free choice
gave woman a higher worth & superior status to man's
'heretical' adoration of woman
parody of religion
blasphemous
trades religious devotion for romantic devotion
e.g. Lancelot genuflects when leaving Guinevere's chamber
language of religion became more courtly
e.g. Dante's Divine comedy
source of modern notion of romantic love

Origins of courtly love: two sources:

1) Ovid (reign of Augustus)
The Art of Love and The Cure for Love
love as a game
predominantly sensual
lovers take service in army of Cupid
they become thin & pale & sleepless
love of another's wife
no love w/out jealousy
2) lyric poetry of Moorish Spain
Ibn Hazm, Dove's Neck-Ring, c. 1022 (practically a text-book on fin' amors)
love as a reunion of parts of souls separated in the creation (Plato)
can only be felt for one person
it has a physical aspect
but union of souls is more important
virtues of love, ennobling the character:
stingy man > generous
gloomy > happy
coward > brave
ignoramous> clever

Lyric poetry of the troubadours

Spain, Italy & esp. southern France in Provence & Aquitaine
variety of subjects
love was favorite theme
alba, or dawn-song:
parting of lovers after a night of clandestine enjoyment
pastorela
the amorous advances of a knight to a shepherd girl
Most lyrics contain a lofty, sublimated passion, often unrequited
lady exalted by her beauty is high above her worshipper
inspiration to liberality & courage
Eleanor of Aquitaine
granddaughter of William Duke of Aquitaine, first known troubadour
married Louis VII (1137-1180) of France
introduced fin' amors into the north
Bernart de Ventadorn (fl. 1140-70)
Louis had marriage annulled because no sons
Eleanor later married Count Henry of Anjou
who became King Henry II of England

Marie de Champagne

daughter of Eleanor & Louis
married Count Henry the Liberal of Champagne in 1164
after husband's death she established a 'court of love'
recitation of love lyrics
stories about lovers
demande d'amor > debate on issues of love
edicts
petitions
a sophisticated, aristocratic form of entertainment
how serious was it?



The Three Estates


Feudalism: a hierarchical structure

three social groups
the nobility
those who fought
the clergy
those who prayed
the peasants and artisans
those who worked
The nobility
landed wealth
granted as a fief from an overlord
vassalage
mutual service
hierarchical stucture inherently unstable
mounted warriors
adoption of stirrups
only the wealthy could serve as knights
horses and arms expensive
warfare provided:
1) new wealth
plunder and booty
2) honor and glory
The social ideal of chivalry
Ideal notion of knighthood: chivalry < OFr chevalier 'horseman'
"trouthe & honour, fredom & curteisie"
an attempt to Christianize & civilize the warrior
Becoming a knight:
overnight vigil
a bath of purification
confession & communion
Invested with rank by both his lord & a priest
vassal of his lord
defender of the church
defender of the weak, poor & helpless
The clergy: mediators between god and humanity
Regular clerics
vows of poverty, obedience, chastity
often isolated from the world
but some still engaged
caring for the poor and sick
teaching
preachers and confessors
Secular clerics
hierarchical
from Pope down to parish priest
cardinals & bishops usually nobles
parish priests often poorly trained
poorly paid
Wealth and prestige of the church
income from tithes and taxes
monasteries and high prelates often very wealthy
clerical privileges
clergy and churches free from taxes
clergy tried in ecclesiastical courts
The peasants: laborers for all
the Manor
peasants dependent upon their lord
who was both judge and police
free and unfree serfs
received land and housing in return for
work and a percentage of their crops
demesne
1/4 to 1/3 reserved for the lord
worked by the peasants, sowing and harvesting
meadows held in common
forests set aside as hunting and hawking preserves
peasants at the bottom of both social and ecclesiastical hierarchies




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